Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 382
- A newlywed couple, move into a new house across the country, only to find out that their marital issues are the least of their problems. Unbeknownst to them, their grim and lascivious landlord has been spying on them from day one.
- At the age of 29, Elgar Enders (Beau Bridges) "runs away" from home. This running away consists of buying a building in a black ghetto in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn. Initially, his intention is to evict the black tenants and convert it into a posh flat. But Elgar is not one to be bound by yesterday's urges, and soon he has other thoughts on his mind. He's grown fond of the black tenants and particularly of Fanny (Diana Sands), the wife of a black radical; he's maybe fallen in love with Lanie (Marki Bey), a mixed race girl; he's lost interest in redecorating his home. Joyce (Lee Grant), his mother has not relinquished this interest and in one of the film's most hilarious sequences gives her MasterCharge card to Marge (Pearl Bailey), a black tenant and appoints her decorator.
- The landlord of a village in eastern Turkey decides to sell his land after a severe drought and migrates to Istanbul with his family. However the struggle for survival in the 'big city' will not be easier for them.
- A man reluctantly serves as the proprietor of a pub, which he inherited from his late father.
- Alyssa moves into a luxury apartment complex but is unaware she is being watched by her disturbed landlord Robert via hidden cameras. Robert will do anything to fill the void left by his estranged daughter--even if that means replacing her.
- An angry landlord hassles her behind-in-rent tenant.
- Maeda has just moved into his new apartment to live by himself. While unpacking, a cute middle school student named Chie Satonaka suddenly appears in his room. She introduces herself as his new landlord, which pleasantly surprises him as he has never seen a landlord so young. His excitement is boosted further when the gorgeous Reiko Shirai, who lives directly next to him, also introduces herself as his new neighbor.
- Four teen-age New York residents need to raise cash to improve a dilapidated building they bought for a dollar.
- Macy, a down-on-her-luck writer, is in need of a new place to live. A chance encounter with a friendly stranger in a coffee shop leads her to an ideal house, however she soon discovers her new landlord, Katie, is not what she seems. Katie is an eccentric and obsessive woman who becomes fixated on Macy, and her behavior quickly turns from friendly to disturbing. Macy's friends, Kristy and Nancy, begin to notice Katie's strange behavior and jealousy towards them. As the days go by, Katie's erratic behavior escalates, and Macy realizes that she is being stalked by her crazy landlord. After observing the landlord's behavior and learning new details about her landlord's life, Macy decides to move but will she make it out alive? "The Landlord" is a suspenseful and thrilling movie that explores the dangers of obsession and the terrifying consequences that can arise when boundaries are crossed.
- The Landlord is the story of Tyler, the unfortunate young proprietor of a demon-haunted apartment building. While finding tenants has never been a problem for Tyler, keeping them alive long enough to pay rent is. No matter how nicely Tyler asks, he cannot keep the demons from eating the renters (or persuade them to wait a month or two, even). They never listen. And why should they? They have an all-you-can-eat buffet of delicious human flesh and Tyler as their pet monkey. But all that might change when Tyler takes a liking to the newest tenant, a desperate young woman running from demons of her own.
- The film tells the story of a ruthless landowner who commandeers property (both land and other men's wives) and leaves a path of human suffering and death in his wake. The film describes an intersecting universe of entrenched power--in which the landowning class, colluding priests, corrupt government officials, violent police, and U.S. businessmen--conspiring to rape the land for their own profit and to suppress the local farmers. In contrast, the working peasants cherish the land as their own and struggle to break free from oppression to build homes and better lives for their families.
- Recorded live in London's Playhouse Theatre, My Gaff, My Rules sees Al Murray's Perrier Award-winning comic creation in top, boisterous ale-swilling form.
- Like every year, Jean-Louis, the property manager, a cunning and depressed man, will chair the meeting of the co-owners. Important questions will be debated.
- An odd man desperately attempts to extend the visit of a young woman hoping to rent out his flat.
- Louis Fay returns from Hong Kong to honor his Father's wish of looking after the Family Business, which is the target of a Criminal Kingpin.
- Al Murray returns as the hilarious, irreverant and hugely entertaining Pub Landlord. One of the most popular live stand-up comedians of recent years, Al Murray has starred in his own major TV series and his Pub Landlord show consistently packs out major west end venues. Guaranteed laughs, but definitely not for the faint-hearted.
- Comedian Al Murray is back with a second instalment of the 'Pub Landlord' live show, in which outrageous bar room banter and pub philosophy are the order of the day.
- The vanishing of a hotel employee prompts an emergency phone call, raising questions about a local woodsman.
- The film is in the development stage.
- A householder tries to hide from a landlord and is chased.
- Apartment shopping in Los Angeles is a downright crime these days. A messy crime.
- Mort the Landlord is a lazy slob who drops mail in the street and steps on it. His big daily project is to catch the rats that infest his house - but he eats the cheese out of the traps before the rats can even get to it.
- Grimes is positive that his agents are incompetent and that the collecting of rents is a ridiculously simple proposition. To demonstrate his convictions he takes the monthly receipt book and starts out on a tour of his properties. His experiences prove that Grimes is no exception to the general rule of the proposition, but it is possible that the demonstration would not be so complete and decisive were it not for the fact that Grimes is an entire stranger to his tenants. His first call is made upon an able-bodied wash woman who receives him with a demonstration that is lacking in nothing except hospitality. It is amateurish, however, to that accorded him at the home of the prize fighter, who is assisted in receiving (?) by several strenuous friends. His appearance after these two encounters is such that the grocery man and tailor may be pardoned for being skeptical of his assertions that he is the owner of the buildings in which they conduct business. His protests to that effect convince them that he is suffering from some mild form of insanity and they do not take him seriously. He is unable to collect rents from them; on the contrary, he is obliged to expend money at the tailor's to replenish a much damaged wardrobe. After this is done he is so satisfied with his personal appearance that when the coquettish daughter of his best tenant smiles on him and invites him to a seat on the porch beside her he flatters himself with the thought that she has a real personal interest in him, and departs without stating the object of his visit. On his way to the next tenement Grimes awakens to the realization that so far he has accomplished nothing and determines that his last call shall not be fruitless; but when he enters the building and finds himself face to face with poverty and sickness his kindly nature asserts itself, and he voluntarily resigns his last chance of making a collection. We then suddenly forget that his experiences up to this time have been productive of laughter, and tears unconsciously spring to our eyes as we see him slip a roll of bills into the hand of one of the poor woman's children and gently steal from the scene. There is a deal of human nature in the incidents of this story, comedy and pathos being admirably blended: and in the acting and scenic environments the story runs true to life.
- Jimmy and Christine are living a great life in their new apartment, except their radiator keeps breaking. When Jimmy suspects foul play by their landlord Tony, he forms a foolproof plan to catch the culprit.
- A violin student struggles to win a concertmaster position. His landlord, who was once a great violinist, starts giving him lessons and helps him to find confidence in himself and his music.
- Newlyweds Kevin (Peterjohn Minto) and Sarah (Rachel Luna) arrive to a new apartment to rent only to be frightened by a crazy landlord (Kenny Copeland)
- The plan that cannot fail.
- Helen moves into a new flat to escape her dominating boyfriend. She cannot understand why objects and ornaments keep being moved. When her ex boyfriend appears outside the flat, she wonders if he could have somehow got hold of the keys.
- Despite being homeless, Doug is determined to make the best of every day he is given. Meanwhile, Malika and her infant daughter are struggling to survive. She is on her way to the food bank when she asks Doug for directions. He kindly obliges and shows her the way. Later, a passerby gives Doug a small donation. As he is crossing the street he doesn't see a truck coming, but luckily Doug saves him before he steps into danger. The stranger is determined to repay him for his heroism, and Doug decides this is the perfect opportunity to help another person in need.
- A young actress is struggling to pay the rent, when a promising script is landing in her laps.
- The Landlord tells us his story, revealing his theories on life, business, and human nature, and how his misunderstood methods have given him an undeservedly bad reputation - except when it's true.